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The R-rated comedy has roared back to life in recent years. Exemplified by the work of Judd Apatow (The 40-Year-Old Virgin, Knocked Up), these films offer up moments of gross-out humor and sometimes shocking sexual escapades, but often end with some form of character growth and long-term romantic commitment.

Observe and Report, written and directed by Jody Hill (The Foot Fist Way) and starring Seth Rogen, who made his name in the aforementioned Apatow films and also co-wrote the teen sex comedy Superbad—shares the boundary-breaking mentality of those earlier comedies: Casual drug use and casual sex are par for the course, but its moments of outrageous humor ultimately take a back seat to the story's darker underbelly.

What sets Observe and Report apart, and not for the better, is the film's treatment of its main character, Ronnie Barnhardt (Rogen). A pathetic mall security officer, Ronnie patrols his territory with zeal, despite lacking the clear authority to detain lawbreakers.

That's a good thing, because Ronnie is not altogether normal. His mother (Celia Weston) spends her time at home drinking and sharing stories with her son about the first time she slept with Ronnie's father, or how his father walked out on them because caring for Ronnie was too much responsibility.

Ronnie clearly loves his mother and takes care of her—he gently covers her with a blanket after she passes out on the living-room floor—but that impulse manifests itself in inappropriate ways with others. He lusts after mall employee Brandi (AnnaFaris), stalking her in the mall parking lot and pressing her for a date. When an outside detective (Ray Liotta) is brought in to investigate a flasher's increasingly brazen behavior, Ronnie tries to finagle a way into full-time law enforcement but succeeds only in harming the investigation.

By the time we hear Ronnie explain that he has "a little bipolar" disorder, we've seen several other manifestations of disturbing behavior, often in the bizarre company of his fellow security guards. Early in the film, they visit a shooting range and express their gun lust by polishing their weapons. Most strange of all is the soft-spoken Dennis (Michael Pena), whose outward behavior conceals a risk-taking side.

The film's one genuinely sweet character is Nell (Collette Wolfe), an injured food-court worker who delights in Ronnie's daily visits. He requests free cups of coffee, which Nell gladly provides, listening to Ronnie discuss his hopes, dreams and obsessions. Nell has her own problems to unload. Hobbled by an injury, she suffers cruel, demeaning comments from her boss. The frustration over her plight—she wants to quit but needs money to cover medical expenses—gets to her, but unlike the other people Ronnie regularly encounters at the mall, Nell doesn't look down on Ronnie or treat him like a joke or nuisance.

Nell also wears a promise ring and speaks of being a "born-again virgin," but such nods to morality are played for jokes in the movie. Her behavior toward Ronnie is what sets her apart from the other characters.

Observe and Report grows increasingly dark as Ronnie's unstable nature begins to manifest in unpredictable ways. The film ends with a shock, but then pulls back from that shocking moment, as if the film doesn't quite have the courage of its convictions. It shows us a troubled soul, but in the end, wants us to love him and laugh with him, believing in him as Nell does.

In a way, the film that Observe and Report most resembles is Paul Thomas Anderson's Punch Drunk Love, in which a disturbed Adam Sandler finds a chance to love and be loved despite the lingering effects of his emotional turmoil. The comedy in Report is much cruder, but the personal journey of its central character is not too far removed from the protagonist of Anderson's film.

For many Christian viewers, however, the hint at a redemptive relationship in Ronnie's life will be too little, and far too late. It feels more like a tacked on subplot to gloss over the movie's darker themes, rather than something integral to Ronnie's development. The outrageous humor in the film will more likely generate disgust than laughs, but even those who find the film amusing may have trouble with Ronnie's outbursts—and the film's encouragement to enjoy his excessive, misguided reactions to other people.

Take it from one who's already observed this film and is here to report: Exercise extreme caution when deciding whether or not to watch this film.

Smoking/Drinking: Mother drinks in front of her son and while alone, and speaks frankly of drunkenness; prescription drugs for bipolar disorder are taken by the person to whom they were prescribed, as well as by someone looking for a quick high; a woman says she's giving up liquor and is "switching to beer," which she says she can drink heavily without the same effects hard liquor has on her; drugs are injected and snorted.

Language/Profanity: Lord's name taken in vain; crude talk about women and sex; forms of the "f" word used as a verb, adjective and exclamation; a man extends his middle finger; a flasher says lewd things to the women to whom he exposes himself.

Sex/Nudity: Kissing; a flasher in a trench coat exposes himself and we see him only from behind at first; later, he appears to be masturbating in front of a woman (again, we see this from behind); we eventually see the man from the front, and a long chase through the mall includes several shots of the man's private parts; a woman's cleavage is visible; a man sleeps with a woman who vomits on the pillow; a mother says she used to sleep with her son's friends; mall cops use light pointer to analyze women in the mall; they spy on bare-breasted women in dressing rooms; a woman says she's a born again virgin and she wears a promise ring; later, a man says he intends to make the woman break her promise to God; a photo of a man's penis is shown as evidence in pursuit of a flasher; a man and woman have sex in a car.

Stealing: A woman puts merchandise into her purse while shopping.

Violence: Mall cops polish their guns and fire at targets at a shooting range; a mall cop Tasers a man; a man attacks several men who appear to be threatening him; the same man attacks several police officers and skateboarders; a man hits another man in the back of the head with a chair; a violent assault; a shooting and its bloody aftermath are shown.